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Purpose: To create a highly balanced comparison of ab interno trabeculectomy (Trabectome, AIT) and trabecular bypass stenting (iStent, TBS).Setting: Eye and Ear Institute, Pittsburgh, Ross Eye Institute, Buffalo, and Glaucoma Associates of Texas, Dallas, USA.Design: Retrospective Exact Matching analysis.Methods: AIT and TBS patients were included from three large glaucoma practices. The primary outcome measure was the unmedicated IOP ≤ 21 mmHg at 2-year follow-up visit. A secondary measure was unmedicated IOP reduction ≥ 20% at 2 years. Patients were matched by baseline IOP, the number of glaucoma medications and glaucoma type using Exact Matching and by age using Nearest Neighbor matching. Patients without a close match were excluded. All surgeries were combined with phacoemulsification. Results: 154 AIT and 110 TBS eyes were analyzed. 48 AIT patients were exactly matched to 48 TBS patients. Both groups had a baseline IOP of 15.3±3.1 mmHg. At 24 months, the mean IOP was 13.9±3.3 for AIT versus 16.8±2.8 mmHg for TBS (p=0.04), while the number of medications was 0.7±1.0 for AIT versus 1.7±1.2 for TBS (p=0.04). The proportion of subjects achieving IOP ≤ 21 mmHg without medications at 24 months was 53% in AIT versus 16.6% in TBS (P < 0.05). At 24-month follow up 17.6% of patients in AIT had ≥ 20% IOP reduction without medication versus no patient in TBS. Conclusions: An Exact Matching comparison of AIT and TBS demonstrated greater IOP reduction with fewer medications in AIT.

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Background: Gut-Brain-Axis provides bidirectional communicational route; imbalance of which can have pathophysiological consequences. It is a frontier in autism research, affects 85% of autistic children (NIH report). Their microbiome has few overall microbes and smaller number of health promising microbes than their neurotypical peers. We hypothesize autism gut might play a role in manifestation of autism behaviours and on treatment, can revert back to normal behaviour considerably. The aim is to better understand to what degree gut microbiota of autism subjects differs from controls and identify bacterial species present exclusively in autism. Materials and Methods: 16s-rRNA-sequence of autism-subjects were retrieved from the American Gut Project Archive. Taxonomic assignment was inferred by similarity based methods using Quantitative Insights Into Microbial Ecology (QIIME). Species abundance was characterized and co-occurrence network was built to infer species interaction using measures of diversity. Statistical parameters were considered to validate the findings. Result: A total of 206 (1.8%) of American Gut Project datasets onstituted of autistic samples. Various bacteria such as Akkermansia sp., and Prevotella sp., were harboured in higher abundance in autistic children with statistical significance than in controls. Conclusion: These findings indicate connecting-link between gut-microbiome-brain-axis and autistic behaviour which can result in improved management

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